Although you’ve found your answer, I don’t know why you couldn’t have found it on Motorola’s UK site
and googling hasn’t provided the answer either
Because on here - https://www.motorola.co.uk/smartphones-motorola-edge-40-neo/p?skuId=759&srsltid=AfmBOoqGQh5hZE63IR3yjb4a_w50AzssOgT-onLj2Y4b8XRFKVePopJ8 - it states the following:
Networks + Bands
- Networks
5G: sub-6
4G: LTE
3G: WCDMA
2G: GSM
Bands
5G: n1/2/3/5/7/8/20/28/38/40/41/66/77/77 HPUE/78/78 HPUE
4G LTE: b1/2/3/4/5/7/8/12/13/17/18/19/20/25/26/28/32/38/38 HPUE/39/40/41/41 HPUE/42/43/48/66
3G: B1/2/4/5/8/19
2G: B2/3/5/8
(my bold)
However I can see how you were confused. Almost all other manufacturers have 2G/3G/4G capable phones and are sold, as an example, Joe Blogs Model A. If those other manufacturers have a 2G/3G/4G AND 5G capable phone it tends to be sold as Joe Blogs Model A 5G.
Due to the confusion/hassle you had in determining if yours was 5G or not, maybe shoot Motorola an email to ask them why they (unlike most other manufacturers) don’t name theirs with 5G in their title?
I for one would never defend iD, but their naming it the Motorola Edge 40 Neo 5G is actually correct as it is a 5G capable phone. It’s Motorola whom didn’t include 5G in their brand and model naming process.
Not being picky, just offering an unbiased opinion.